I'd say the best forensic investigators tend to look at both sides of the coin. I myself have been focused on both ethical hacking and forensic investigation for awhile after I get my associates degree in forensics I'm going to start with the CHFI then get work to send me to all the sans courses they can.

Ya see that's how I was seeing it at first. I had a few different people tell me to "be a hacker, then be a person that finds them" I was also told vice versa.

But the way it worked out with my school and the location of the classes it worked better to drop the CHFI class for now and just use the money I already paid for the CEH. I guess this will help me as I am open to go into either field, Network Security or Computer Forensics.

Join this live online training led by EC-Council lead trainer Kevin Cardwell, as he shares with you some of the interesting topics from EC-Council Computer Hacking Forensics Investigator (CHFI) program.

In this session, Kevin will be covering the following modules:

Module 26: Network Forensics & Investigating Logs

Module 27: Investigating Network Traffic

Module 28: Router Forensics

In this 3 hours online training session, you will be introduced to network forensics, you will learn how normal network traffic patterns look during protocol analysis, and you will get to see indications of attack attempts that are typically encountered when analyzing network traffic from a cybercrime event.

This training session will conclude with an introduction to router forensics, an area that is often overlooked as a potential source of evidence, and Kevin will share and show why forensics investigation should take a look at the router and the potential evidence it may contain.

Yes, thanks for the link. Anyone have a contact to ask if there is a recording of this also. I may not be able to attend as I have a FT job that doesn't deal with computers. Or does anyone know of some free software that will let me record it?